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Interview with Barry J. Marshall

Transcript of the telephone interview with Professor Barry Marshall after the announcement of the 2005 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine by science writer Joanna Rose, 3 October 2005.

- Hello. Barry Marshall here.

- Hello, Barry. This is Joanna Rose from the Nobel Foundation.
I'm making a recording for our Web pages.

- Oh, great!

- Congratulations to the Prize.

- Thank you.

- Did you expect it?

- I think ... Well, Robin and I often have a beer ...

- Yes?

- ...down by the riverside at this time of year. But it's more of a joke, and
I think... Of course, it's funny how things like this are such a surprise, but ...
I mean, of course, we would always dream about winning the Nobel, but we never
really thought we'd ... A thing like this, we could say it was an important discovery,
but there are so many important things in medicine these days that ... I could say that,
if we never had won it, it wouldn't necessarily be a disappointment. It's just that
there are so many other good discoveries out there, and hard workers.

- What does it mean for your work, do you think, now - from
now on?

- I think my work'll be a little bit disrupted. [laughter] But I think
there some very exciting projects that I'm doing at the moment, and I think that I have to
continue on with those, because that's where the future of my ... That's where my interest is
at the moment; I love doing this work. So it will just create some extra activities for me!
So, I'm not sure what'll happen. I think I'll just have to float in the breeze, I guess ... and
see what happens.

- Your colleague, Robin Warren, he mentioned to me that nobody really believed you in this at
the beginning.

- Well, it's so entrenched that ulcers are caused by stress; and so, even now in the movies
in Hollywood you still see people developing ulcers from stress. But I think most ... Well, I
suppose people that are educated haven't heard about these bacteria that cause ulcers. But ...
it's not as exciting as it was a few years ago, because so many people now are being cured
and you don't know people with ulcers any more. It's becoming a rare disease in modern countries,
Western countries. But, of course, in a lot of countries it's still very common.

- When did you realise that you'd been awarded the Prize?

- Well, when we received a call from Sweden about an hour ago.

- So now you're celebrating?

- Well, we're not ... We're being very careful - we're just having one glass of beer at the moment.
And I don't want to appear on television, intoxicated. Dr Warren and I, we're
very moderate in our activities and, usually, one beer is enough to keep
us cheerful.

- For how many years did you make the jokes about the Prize?

- Oh ... Well, the first time we ... We first had a publication in the
Lancet in 1984 ...'83 or ... it
might have been '83, and we made a joke then: we thought we'd probably win the Prize
in 1986. [laughter]

- So it's just 19 years later - it's lost it's kick!

- 19 years later! [more laughter] So we still enjoy it very much, and I visited Sweden a couple
of years ago and I'm just looking forward to visiting again so much and showing my wife
all the wonderful things we saw there.

- Well, you are so much welcome here. Hope to see you here in
December. Thank you very much.